PCWorld (USA)

Here’s How

From new playback controls to a screen recorder to dark mode scheduling, Android 11 has some improvemen­ts worth checking out.

- BY RYAN WHITWAM

There’s a new version of Android floating around, and whether you get Android 11 via an OTA update or a shiny new phone upgrade, there will be new things to explore. Android 11 includes numerous quality of life improvemen­ts and security enhancemen­ts, some of which might replace features you had in the previous version. Here are eight things you should look for when acclimatin­g to the latest OS.

1. NEW MEDIA PLAYBACK CONTROLS

Media controls have been part of the Android notificati­on shade for years, but that changes in Android 11. That playback notificati­on still exists, but it’ll be above your notificati­ons in the quick settings. The upshot is your controls will always be in the same place, and they won’t push important notificati­ons out of the way. You can even swipe left and right to switch between multiple media apps. However, you do lose a row of quick settings toggles. It’s probably a worthwhile trade-off.

2. SCREEN RECORDER

Believe it or not, there was a time when you couldn’t take a screenshot on Android without a USB cable or root access. That changed in Android 4.0, and there may be a time when we look back on the era when we couldn’t take screen recordings with equal shock. Google just added this feature in Android 11, although some OEMS like Samsung already have their own recorders. Still, this ensures virtually all phones will let you make screen recordings going forward.

You can access this feature in the quick settings. You have the option to record audio and show touches before each recording begins. Unfortunat­ely, you can’t change the resolution or bitrate right now, so the files get pretty big. Hopefully that changes in Android 12.

3. CONVERSATI­ONS AND BUBBLES

There are a couple of new ways to message in Android 11. For one, there’s a new class of notificati­ons specifical­ly for conversati­ons. All your apps that identify as conversati­ons (e.g., Google Messages, Telegram, Whatsapp) will appear in a new section at the top of the notificati­on list. You can also long-press on messaging notificati­ons to mark the conversati­on as priority, so you can find them more easily in the future.

The other change to messaging is Bubbles, which allow you to turn the notificati­ons into Chat Head-style floating icons. You can enable bubbles by tapping the notificati­on button, or go into the notificati­on settings for any app you want to bubble and flip the feature on.

4. POWER BUTTON MENU

The power button is for more than turning your phone off in Android 11. A long-press will bring up a screen with both Google Pay and smart home functional­ity. For Google Pay, just make sure you’ve got some cards set up in the app, and then you can switch between them on the power screen. Below

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